English

Quantum Non-Objectivity from Performativity of Quantum Phenomena

General Physics 2015-06-19 v2 Logic Quantum Physics

Abstract

We analyze the logical foundations of quantum mechanics (QM) by stressing non-objectivity of quantum observables which is a consequence of the absence of logical atoms in QM. We argue that the matter of quantum non-objectivity is that, on the one hand, the formalism of QM constructed as a mathematical theory is self-consistent, but, on the other hand, quantum phenomena as results of experimenter's performances are not self-consistent. This self-inconsistency is an effect of that the language of QM differs much from the language of human performances. The first is the language of a mathematical theory which uses some Aristotelian and Russellian assumptions (e.g., the assumption that there are logical atoms). The second language consists of performative propositions which are self-inconsistent only from the viewpoint of conventional mathematical theory, but they satisfy another logic which is non-Aristotelian. Hence, the representation of quantum reality in linguistic terms may be different: from a mathematical theory to a logic of performative propositions. To solve quantum self-inconsistency, we apply the formalism of non-classical self-referent logics.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1404.7077,
  title  = {Quantum Non-Objectivity from Performativity of Quantum Phenomena},
  author = {Andrei Khrennikov and Andrew Schumann},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1404.7077},
  year   = {2015}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-22T04:00:44.350Z